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Industrial designer Brad Ascalon

Brad Ascalon, born in 1977, is an American industrial designer who grew up in the Philadelphia suburb of Cherry Hill Township, New Jersey. He earned a bachelor's degree at Rutgers University, and received a Masters Degree in industrial design from New York's Pratt Institute. His early artistic and design influences included his grandfather, the Hungarian-born Art Deco sculptor and industrial designer Maurice Ascalon, as well as his father, the American sculptor and stained glass artist David Ascalon, founder of Ascalon Studios.[1]

Brad Ascalon's bent plywood Tivola Chair

His early design experience included work in the area of furniture and product design with the firm of Karim Rashid, and packaging design for the cosmetics conglomerate L'Oréal. In 2005, the international design magazine Wallpaper* selected Ascalon as one the year's top-ten up-and-coming designers, citing the design of his bent-plywood Tivola chair.[1][2] His designs, like his Echo Chaise, which curves like a bass clef, and his Splash toilet-paper storage system are often inspired by music.[3] Presently, through his own New York City-based studio, Ascalon's emphasis is contemporary furniture design. His concepts have been manufactured and featured in the catalogues of notable firms throughout the world, including France's Ligne Roset, where he is one of only two Americans ever selected to design for the company.

References

  1. ^ a b "10 Most Wanted Designers" (pdf). Wallpaper*: 114. July-August 2005. http://www.bradascalon.com/pdfs/press/03.%20Wallpaper.jpg.pdf. Retrieved 2008-10-06.  
  2. ^ Lotozo, Eils. "Designer-in-training on magazine's top 10", The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 26, 2005. Accessed October 5, 2008.
  3. ^ Heusser, Erica (Fall 2006). "Music Man" (pdf). Philadelphia Magazine's Home & Garden: 13–14. http://www.bradascalon.com/pdfs/press/02.%20Philly%20Home%20and%20Garden.jpg.pdf. Retrieved 2008-10-06.  

External links


Brad Ascalon


Brad Ascalon's "Tivola Chair" (2005), a bent wood combination chair and side table.


Brad Ascalon (March 7, 1977), industrial designer, was raised in the suburbs of Philadelphia. A first-generation American, Ascalon was immersed in the world of art and design at an early age. His grandfather Maurice Ascalon (1913-2003), a Hungarian-born sculptor and industrial designer, together with his father, the Israeli-born artist David Ascalon (b.1945), founded Ascalon Studios, an art and design firm dedicated to the creation of site-specific artwork and furnishings for worship and public spaces. It is in this context that Brad became skilled at working with various materials and artistic media, including metal sculpture, stained glass and mosaics arts.



Ascalon’s first artistic expressions, though, came in the form of music. From an early age, he played both piano and guitar, and he eventually emerged as a songwriter and composer. In the latter half of the 1990s, while writing and performing music and pursuing a liberal arts degree at Rutgers University, Ascalon continued to explore the visual arts as a self-taught abstract painter. He experimented by applying his large sphere of musical influence to the canvas, particularly modern jazz and classical, becoming captivated by the vast expressionistic similarities between writing music and creating art.

After graduating from Rutgers where he was a member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, Ascalon moved to Manhattan and while continuing to paint, he worked both in advertising and the music industry. Motivated by his desire to think more abstractly, he changed course and pursued a Masters’ degree in Industrial Design at New York's Pratt Institute. While pursuing his degree, Ascalon served as a design intern for a number of prominent designers, including the studio of the world-renowned Karim Rashid.

Today, Ascalon's emphasis is furniture design, but he delves into the areas of consumer goods and packaging design as well. His designs, often subtly whimsical, tend to ignore an object's traditional form. Rather, in his approach to design, he considers an objects function irrespective of traditional form, and builds it anew from the ground up. In 2005, the London-based international journal of design, Wallpaper*, included Ascalon on their annual list of the world's top ten young designers. Today, Ascalon resides in Manhattan and the Hamptons, New York.
Brad Ascalon's "Echo Chaise" (2004).

References


  • “10 Most Wanted Designers”, Wallpaper*: Annual Design Directory, July/August 2005 at 111.


  • External links

  • Ascalon Studios
  • Brad Ascalon Industrial Design

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